NEW NORTH* WEST. Ji. L.ODUI . . . .dID o1. DIEl IMi I CITY, PallAY, MAY 27. 4i$p* D IVtVr VD IN THEB BAST. telebo $*leypp 4aforges us our reperable Uncle is about to entertain Red Cloud at Walblngton. He is now as reute there -with J 3Us h IhaIIs--bet.,ewr uw John IRlbw- aeBomran half-breed, who was eaught lemuggl g powder to theSlouz Indi -aes, whoa they, under Red'CI.o, were at open war with the Gallatin setler:, i at cost of $1,00,000 to eontn. Twoeisrs ago the 27th of last December, this same Red -Cloud murdered somes 0 United States sol diets at Fort Phil Kearney--the Petterman massamee; a year or two ago he sent an In solent message to to e Commissioners sent to taret with him, demanded the abandonment of the PoWder river route, the dlsmnatitag of Porte Phil Kearney and Smith, and the withdrawal of troops from altthat region of country. The government humiliated itselftothe redskin. The demand wasaceed ed to it a loss of some $~8,000,000 n property, to the government, and our ...

NEW NORTH- WEST. J.. ll M3ll., . . Ed. tor IEER LODUE CITY, FRIDAY, JUNE 4. 2'ilE COMING ISSUE. "If Josh can beat God then I am for Josh." Such are the words attributed to Senator Nye by George Alfred Townsend. Even in jest. those are bad words to come from the lips of a Senator. The avowal was not on an abstract religious point, but in reply to an interrogative suggestion that unless preventive measures were adopted the Chinese and Chinese Paganism were liable to sweep over the Pacific coast, de stroy our Republican institutions, build the altars of idolatry on the siteof Christian churches, and wrest this fair and rich do main from the hands of American citizens for the aggrandizement of aliens and na bobs. The Chinese question will, before long, be a more important issue with the Pacific coast, than the Indian question, and like it, for like reason, we fear it will be one the government at Washington will be slow to comprehend. It esteems the Chi nese treaty a great advantage to ...

NEW NORTI~ W1ES DEER LODGE CITY, FRIDAY, JUNE 8. A Sadt Story. Death of Lthe Eldaest on of jhknry Clay 7Tdrte."lgh Year. of oprd Insanity, and Final Death in an Asylum-A hLad man Through Love From the (fnclnal I:aqulrer, May 17. Outside of Fayette County, where the prophet is held in high, but not in blame less repute, being "in his own country," the name of Clay has ever been a sacred one in Kentucky. and to name him has been to quote lovingly. "Wherever freedom found evotary that votary met in bits a champion. When areece, the classic Grecce, the foun tan of rd.fnement, the birthplace of elo quence, and liberty, and of poetry-when Greece awoke from the long slumber of ages and beat back the faded crescent to its native east; when Macedon recalled to mind the feastsof her conquering boy, and tihe Spartan struck in for the land that bred him; then the voice of Clay rolled over the waters of the blue Atlantic as a greeting from the new world to the old. But husth ed is that voice who...

"*ý $'a I*UPWVZVATUNE z4Io fi bsidc lin the Plcz Frim Oudala ioutbh/fo tW5as. My medical fiend Jas4 puffed away vig. orously at his cigar fur some minntes, is tileis(ti, and then, throwing away the stump, >4 114S , Wa tefltt lees f, whee Iliad just been placed in chast of adia ncat the smnjmit (It Ubi 4i*1j uw et* Shen ing IousNs5 s.o o'clock in tbe evening, and was told that a messenger had been there f toem Camp No, -.-.. wit ke regqu that I would lose no time Ip hurrying over there to attend upon John IBimith, Wrho was in very critical conditioq. The mpqsenger had %een 'ery urgent. and#[p war 4k1 ently a case tf life and death--nothing less. I took a few slasatos to consider. I was tiret out, and wanted sleep badly, but could, on a pinch, go a little farther without breaking down entirely. The moos would be up at eleven Y'ctcý,10t,,pL1 nlaht wa ul ant etlvtthos gb tliedstI6*bta2onlyJsfds eae -failing, uutd wrs from five to eig3gI feuet deep on ahe level, if you can use the oz*...

NEW NORT i- WEST. Jras. E. M1 ,, . p . itu m oItlU CIT, ,WPlAT., JUn 17. 1'NBN CM1NXSB QUgvmzox. Weser seewhat wpriesd sa$ article I theuo Se f June th, emaitled "The C Mim Qeton;" surprised, beraseeu o abs dden ead ntibimeeie Valer etldemsd by the eas·l a. the umeroas very gnoa wemreitfelliteontheutse a t. The e.,oGe geas bek .to ameo remote period to quote the rvews esprwedae this questioh advere to e Chin ainianlg. By looking over his recent Oieu, the editor will er that In notioS lag the shipment of 100 Chinaman froa Californi to Menta.a by Hwary C~elghtoa, I deuna~ to e prr op p afe the 4efd eof s erar of ChiuMa Iar on .fateae, and that at a time when the Chinese question was esolving itself nlato *ne of momentoue impdrabnoe to Montana. We were at a loss at the time to understand the untimely reserve of expressle, sad it Is certainly inconsistent with Its sadden en thusansm at prmaent.. Again, it ays " I we srmember corretly " th position taken by thei Poor and other "opponents...

NEW NORTH-WEST. DBiER i O z cmIT, FIDAY, UN 17; JOSIf BILLINGS PIAPEBSB. Pepper Pods. If ju bar gota spirited and noble boy, appeal tew his generosity, it yu hay p a besavy and sullen one, appeal tow hisbb . Knowledge, like chaty, habod begin at borne, and then spred. Amcekshuns are the compliments that bhe yen pays tow the virtewous. Time is like money, the less we har or it tow spare the further we make it go. Nobody but a pbool will spend his time trying to convince a phooL The tongue is really a very fast member of the boddy politick, he duz all the talkin, and two-thirds or the thinkin. Men who invade the province ur wim min are always jeered at, and how ken wim min, when they invade the province or men, expekt to escape the same kind or treatment. lie who spends his younger days in disa pashun is mortpging himself to disease and poverty, two inexorable creditors, who are certain to foreclose at last, and take pos session of the premises. There is menny a person who kan set a m...

NEW NORTH- WEST. J... H. 3(111., . = .4Am.m loin LDGE CITY, PRIDAT, JICE U. The Chinese Question. bener or later he mst be met Al of the qumesetis of National and Territorial aestern, upon which so much time and labor are spent, fade Into insigniicance In prusomes of this. As far as they relate to the people of the Pacific Coast, the ques ieune of tariff and internal revenue are of minor Importance. These questions simply refer to thie (nlet to which our property should be taxed. The Chinese problem if unsolved, signifles that we will shortly have but little property upon whict'taxes can be levied. Reconstruction is an accomplished fact. The reformation of the civil service and the question of "Minority Represents. tion" are only just beginning to attract the attention which their importance demands -while their determination will belong to the East and in their settlement the West at large will have only a "still small voice," and Montana none. The Chinese question Is only another ...

NEW NORTM=WEST. Dung ImaWerTr, rIlYTrJUaN 54. 4 Lefof Pr*vatte PfWldsI HAEf. From the New York Sea. In a debate on Judges' salates la the Senate, on Friday last, SeBater Carpenter made the following statement: " When General Grant's administration c.me in, he offered the ofce of Secretary of State to a statesman from the West, of Iowa, a man of whom all of as would have been proud to see in that place. How did be look at it ? To come to Washington and live as a Secretary ofjtate should live would cost him $1i.000 a year, and his sala ,y was $8,000; $7.000 out of pocket each T e r. Iw he were to stay with his family a lows he could support them on ,000 nad make $11.000. There was $17,000 dif ference in his bank account. He could not afford to pay that amount to be Secretary of State. 'then Gen. (rant goes right to the Eastern States, and offers the office to a man to whom the $17.000 made no tarthly difference; in that case your $8.000 paid to the present Secretary of State is thrown...